Zanna Seipp-Katz and Aaron Woznica stand outside the trailer of the safe-injection site in Moss Park. Woznica holds a Nalaxone kit which temporarily reverses the effects of an opioid overdose. (Olivia Blackmore)

The site, which now sits in a trailer, is a place where drug users can safely inject or use drugs. Guests are supervised by volunteers. Naloxone kits, which temporarily reverse the effects of an opioid overdose, are kept close by.

“The trailer we’re currently using has been donated through CUPE and the volunteers [and] financial donations have all come from the community across Toronto and from outside of the GTA,” said Aaron Woznica, 26, a harm-reduction worker who volunteers at the site.

The site has been run without government support, Woznica said, with the exception of it not being raided by police.

More than 120 overdoses have been reversed at the site.

“Since we’ve opened up, overdoses have gone down and we have been able to manage them and catch them before folks really go down,” Woznica said.

Opioid-related deaths in Canada are expected to hit 4,000 by the end of 2017.

“Without overtly bashing any politician, what I will say is that what we’ve done here has been in spite of all three levels of government and not because of them,” Woznica said.

Volunteers face difficult situations being on the frontlines of the opioid crisis. One of the site’s founders, Zoë Dodd, established a frontline support workers group to assist volunteers with their mental health needs.

For Seipp-Katz, the site means something else for her wellbeing.

“I needed to be here for my mental health. This is where I needed to be,” she said.

“This is kind of almost self care in itself, it’s taking care of the part of me that makes me feel like I’m doing something and I’m making a difference.”

For “defying apathy and the law,” and for saving lives, the volunteers at the Moss Park supervised injection/overdose prevention site are our Torontonians of the Year. pic.twitter.com/oFCcZ2oYEj

Despite the site’s controversy, both Woznica and Seipp-Katz said that the community has been supportive of volunteers and guests.

“The Sunday night of Thanksgiving I didn’t know how donations would go. We had pretty frequent donations and some days were better than others but I figured it’s Thanksgiving and people are going to forget about us,” Seipp-Katz said.

“About half an hour [or] 45 minutes into the shift it was like a parade of people coming from all over the park with loads of food . . . We had no space to put all the food.”

https://twitter.com/TorontoOPS/status/943561734706438144

Seipp-Katz said that the site receives a lot of repeat guests and often friendships are made. She doesn’t mention her own experience with drug use unless it comes up naturally.

“I feel like I have a different perspective, the thing is that when you look at someone you don’t know their story,” Seipp-Katz said.

“People have a perception of what a drug user looks like, I think that’s a big problem with society.”